Here's the miraculous history of the Tahiti temple that President Hinckley dedicated 35 years ago

The dedication of the temple on the Pacific island of Tahiti was "a fulfillment of the dreams of thousands who have looked forward to this glorious day," said President Gordon B. Hinckley, who was then serving as second counselor in the First Presidency.

Over the course of three days, — exactly 35 years ago — from Oct. 27-29, 1983, President Hinckley dedicated the long-awaited temple with about 2,500 Latter-day Saints attending the sessions. Elder L. Tom Perry of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles accompanied him on the trip.

The Papeete Tahiti Temple was the fifth temple dedicated in Polynesia, one of six temples dedicated that year and the 25th in operation at the time.

"I count it a great privilege to be here with you. It is a wonderful thing to come back to Tahiti. I don't know of a more beautiful place," President Hinckley said.

Twenty years before, he had dedicated a meetinghouse on Maupiti Island, north of Tahiti. Afterwards, as he was conducting a conference on Huahine Island, a telegram from a nurse named Claire Teihotaata arrived. A boat carrying members home from the meetinghouse dedication had hit a reef, and 18 people — 15 of them Church members — had drowned.

The conference was immediately canceled and Church leaders searched out a boat and food to make the 24-hour journey to the accident.

Claire survived the wreck by holding onto a pole for three hours. During that time, she prayed for rescue. She also prayed that God would show her the true Church so she could work for Him. Soon, Andre Manea, a fisherman, pulled her and eight others out of the sea.

President Hinckley arrived a day later and described the scene. "Everywhere people were crying. We walked up and down the streets, holding the children whose mothers had been killed, trying to comfort the fathers."

Church members in Tahiti gather on temple grounds Sunday, Nov. 12, 2006, for the rededication of the Papeete Tahiti Temple. Photo: Sarah Jane Weaver, Church News

He met Claire, who was injured and emotionally distraught. After asking if she would like a blessing, then explaining what a blessing was, President Hinckley encouraged her to join the Church and serve the Lord.

Between dedicatory sessions of the Papeete Tahiti Temple, President Hinckley met Claire again. Shortly after receiving that blessing, Claire had joined the Church, believing it an answer to her prayer. She'd also married Manea, the fisherman who rescued her. He, too, had joined the Church and was serving as first counselor to President C. Jay Larson, president of the Papeete Tahiti Temple.

In 1843, the Prophet Joseph Smith called four men — Addison Pratt, Benjamin F. Grouard, Knowlton F. Hanks and Noah Rogers — to open a mission in Hawaii, then known as the Sandwich Islands. They were unable to find a ship going there after three months, so they boarded a ship called the Timoleon which was headed for Tahiti, then known as the Society Islands. Elder Hanks died of tuberculosis during that voyage and was buried at sea.

After 203 days at sea, the Timoleon stopped at Tubuai on April 30, 1844. The missionaries received such a warm welcome from the islanders that Elder Pratt decided to stay there while Elder Grouard and Elder Rogers went on to Tahiti.

Other missionaries to the Church's first foreign language mission soon followed, and some of their descendants attended the Papeete Tahiti Temple dedication in 1983.

Elder Perry's wife, Sister Barbara D. Perry, is a descendant of Thomas William Whitaker, a missionary who served in Tahiti in 1850. She accompanied Elder Perry to the original dedication of the Tahiti temple.

Twenty-three years later, Elder Perry returned to Tahiti in 2006 for the rededication of the temple. At the rededication, he expressed love for the country.

"The people are just wonderful," he told the Church News. "There are not a friendlier people in all the earth than the people here in Tahiti. The ones that came (to the rededication) came reverently this morning. I think it was a very spiritual experience for all of them."